From theater to film to television, Costume Designer Trisha Biggar brought a broad background of expertise to her work designing the costumes of Episode I.

After training at the Wimbledon School of Art, Trisha Biggar worked with several prestigious British theatre companies including the Glasgow Citizens' Theatre and Opera North in Leeds.

Biggar then moved into designing the costumes for films such as the award-winning Silent Scream, directed by David Hayman, (winner of the British Academy Michael Powell Award for Best Film of the Year and the Special Jury Prize at the Berlin Festival, amongst other awards) and Wild West, directed by David Attwood, (winner of the Edinburgh Film Festival Critics' Award).

Her television drama credits include the mini-series Moll Flanders (for which she received a BAFTA nomination for Best Costume Design), The Missing Postman and The Mug's Game. She designed the costumes for the BBC films Saigon Baby and Truth or Dare. Other series designed by Biggar are The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles, Love Hurts, Van der Valk, and A Class Act.

Episode I is the fourth Star Wars film, yet it brings to life a previous generation, whose actions shaped events that took place before the classic trilogy; and so Biggar had to make sure costume continuity was respected, while at the same time drawing on her skills and imagination in order to trace her own path through new territory.
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The first and foremost challenge was the sheer volume of costumes required to bring to life George Lucas' vision, and the short time frame in which all of these ideas had to become physical reality. In less than a year, over one thousand costumes were painstakingly designed and put together, piece by piece. When working on a project of this scale, careful management of a productive team is essential; and so Biggar was there at every step, making sure that each member of the team was doing exactly what was needed.

Inspiration for the realization of this myriad of costumes came from a variety of sources, including, of course, the classic Star Wars trilogy. "We obviously had to have some continuity from the first films, and we had, among others, the Jedi costumes," Biggar says. "Since we see them again in Episode I, we tried to link through and bring parts of their costumes from the first film back into this one. We used virtually the same Jedi cloak, but we experimented with different types of fabric. And we modified the undergarments to make them more suitable for younger men, men who have to fight."

Other inspirational sources included the cultures of several countries, mixed together and revised with the Star Wars universe in mind. Even the Roman Empire influenced some of the designs. But no hypothetical future style shows up in Biggar's work, for her designer eyes were always turned toward the past. "The costumes have all been drawn from the past. A long time ago. Not futuristic," she says.

Devising a real cloth costume based on a design drawing is a process that Biggar was well familiar with, but Episode I made this a bigger challenge than usual, for Star Wars' exotic setting gave rise to some concepts that were very highly imaginative. Another difficulty lay in the fact that some of the costumes were intended for characters who were not human. And on top of that, Biggar had to keep in mind that certain pieces of clothing were to be worn during action scenes, sometimes even fitted to stuntmen who jumped, fell, and pushed themselves - and the costumes they wore - to their limits.

The Royal Guard costume is one example. "We had to look at what the people who would be wearing the costumes would be doing. And so a few of them had to be adapted so the people wearing them wouldn't injure themselves. Some different fabrics for stuntmen, and so on," Biggar says.

Staying true to an already deep and detailed universe while at the same time improving old concepts and introducing completely new ideas is a challenge like few others, but one that Biggar could match up to and enjoy. "Everything was great fun, really, because there was such a wide variety of things to do," she concludes with a smile.
The Royal Guard Costume
My source: the official site, http://www.starwars.com